Once again Jane Harper showcases her ability to atmospherically evoke the faultlines in a small community, this time in the coastal town of Evelyn Bay in Tasmania. In this character driven, slow burn of a mystery, Kieron Elliot, a sports physiotherapist, returns home to help his mother, Verity, help pack up their home in preparation for his dementia suffering father, Brian, to move into a care home. Kieron never came back after tragedy struck 12 years ago during a savage and devastating storm in which his golden older brother, Finn, and Toby, Liam's father, died trying to rescue 18 year old Kieron from the dangerous caves. On the same day, 14 year old Gabby Birch went missing, her bag recovered from the sea later. A guilt ridden Kieron has never really got over what happened, but like the statues in the sea, The Survivors, commemorating the loss of life in a wreck, he has survived, thanks to his strong connection and love for partner, Mia, and for Audrey, his baby daughter.
Kieron is shocked to see just how much Brian has deteriorated, hard to care for, with a habit of escaping and going wandering in the town. On the first evening back, Kieron meets with Ash, a childhood friend, who persuades him and Mia to meet another friend, Sean, at the Surf and Turf, an evening in which Kieron crosses paths with Liam Gilroy, who still holds him responsible for the death of his father. The events of 12 years ago come back to haunt the Evelyn Bay community after young vibrant artist and waitress Bronte Laidler is found murdered the following morning. Local cop, Sergeant Chris Renn, is joined by Hobart DI Sue Pendlebury in the murder inquiry. On an online forum and with each other, locals let rip, deciding who is guilty, as malice, gossip, resentments, jealousies, secrets, grief and trauma rise to the surface, with people spilling their guts about each other. Kieron finds himself revisiting a past where he thought he knew what happened, only to discover all was not as it appeared.
Harper excels in her depiction of small town coastal life, with the wide range of characters, from recent additions like author George Barlin, to Trish Birch, a ghost of a woman that has never got over the disappearance of her daughter, Gabby, convinced the police investigation into her disappearance was inadequate. Kieron and Ash were far from role model teenagers, Kieron's parents have never got over the loss of Finn, and whilst overtly never blaming him, emotions can often be darker and harder to rationalise in practice. It is this depth of subtle and nuanced characterisation, no-one emerges without flaws, that marks Harper as a terrific and compulsive writer whose talent has ensured the large number of readers that now follow her. A brilliant read that I thoroughly enjoyed! Many thank to Little, Brown for an ARC.